NRBQ's short-lived alliance with Mercury Records resulted in one of the tightest and most consistently rockin' albums of their career, At Yankee Stadium, but a year later they found themselves back on their own Red Rooster label, where the band relaxed and let their characteristic wit come to the forefront on 1979's
Kick Me Hard. Opening with a musical look at America's drug laws as only
NRBQ could interpret them ("Wacky Tobacky"),
Kick Me Hard finds
the Q indulging their fondness for goofiness on tunes like "It Was an Accident" (romance is complicated by unplanned pregnancy), "Things We Like to Do" (a rewrite of an old
Ross Bagdasarian number in which the guys declare their fondness for miniskirts and the TV show CHiPs), and "Chores" (in which someone seems to enjoy doing their pig imitation just a bit too much). But as always,
NRBQ also provides an equal amount of evidence that they're one of the most solid, soulful, and eclectic bands on the planet, running from barrelhouse R&B ("All Night Long"), rootsy rockabilly ("This Old House"), cool jazz ("Tenderly"), and other stuff that simply exists in a world all its own ("Electric Train"), with the band displaying sharp chops and tremendous charm throughout (especially guitarist
Al Anderson and keyboard wizard
Terry Adams). And as a bonus, you get perhaps the most remarkable version of "North to Alaska" ever captured by modern recording equipment! How can you go wrong? [Some reissues tack on eight bonus cuts, including the free jazz workout "Welcome to Orlando" and "What Can I Say," later covered by
Yo La Tengo.]